The lions’ teeth were damaged during their lifetimes. Study co-author Thomas Gnoske found thousands of hairs embedded in the exposed cavities of the broken teeth. Disclaimer: AAAS and EurekAlert!
Most of us will need dental work at some point — it's rare to get a proper look at how the process happens. Insider spoke to Sami Shahhal, a restorative dentist and owner of a dental-educational ...
Now, an innovative genetic analysis of hairs trapped inside the cavities of their broken teeth have revealed new insights into the prey the so-called Tsavo man-eaters once hunted. The harrowing ...
Scientists analyzed hairs extracted from the broken teeth of two 19th century 'man-eater' lions. Their analysis revealed DNA from giraffe, human, oryx, waterbuck, wildebeest and zebra as prey ...
He also was the first to notice that thousands of broken and compacted hairs had accumulated in exposed cavities in the lions' damaged teeth during their lifetimes. In 2001, Gnoske and Julian ...
He also was the first to notice that thousands of broken and compacted hairs had accumulated in exposed cavities in the lions’ damaged teeth during their lifetimes. In 2001, Gnoske and Julian ...